The Bitcoin estate planning problem is not a legal problem. It is a competence gap disguised as one.

There are approximately 150,000 licensed estate planning attorneys in the United States. The number who can competently advise a client with $500,000 or more in Bitcoin — who understand self-custody, multisig, the mechanics of seed phrase succession, the IRS's evolving treatment of digital assets, and the interaction between Bitcoin's unique properties and trust structures — is a small fraction of that. Estimates from practitioners in this space put it somewhere between a few hundred and a few thousand.

The problem is that the other 149,000 will not tell you they are not qualified. They will hear "Bitcoin" and either assume it is just another investable asset (treat it like a brokerage account) or freeze entirely and draft generic language that gives your estate no meaningful guidance at all. Either failure mode can cost your heirs millions.

This guide is for holders with serious Bitcoin positions — the kind of person for whom finding a competent attorney is not optional. We will cover how to find candidates, the ten questions that determine whether an attorney is genuinely qualified, the five red flags that should end a conversation immediately, how fee structures work for this kind of engagement, what documents to bring to a first meeting, and how to build and coordinate the full professional team your estate actually requires.

If you want to understand the foundational concepts first — the structures an attorney should know, the tax mechanics they must understand — start with our comprehensive Bitcoin estate planning guide. This article assumes you already understand what a dynasty trust is and why step-up in basis matters. The focus here is entirely on how to hire the right attorney to execute.

Why Most Estate Attorneys Fail Bitcoin Holders

Estate planning as a discipline is conservative by design. The legal structures that govern wealth transfer — wills, revocable trusts, irrevocable trusts, powers of attorney, beneficiary designations — have been refined over centuries. The practitioners who specialize in this area are trained to apply settled law to predictable asset classes: real estate, equities, business interests, life insurance.

Bitcoin breaks three assumptions that underpin all of this.

First: the custodian assumption. Traditional estate planning assumes that assets are held by identifiable institutions — banks, brokerages, insurance companies — that can be notified of a death, comply with probate orders, and transfer ownership through established processes. Bitcoin held in self-custody has no custodian. No one can be notified. No institution will honor a probate order by simply transferring a balance. If the seed phrase is not accessible, the Bitcoin is gone — no appeal, no recovery, no exception.

Second: the title assumption. Real estate has a deed. Stocks have certificates or book entries. Bitcoin has cryptographic keys. "Ownership" of Bitcoin is the ability to sign transactions with the private key derived from the seed phrase. An attorney who writes a will that "bequeaths all Bitcoin held in the decedent's name" has written a document that means nothing in the self-custody context. There is no registry, no title company, no counterparty that can verify and transfer Bitcoin based on a court order.

Third: the jurisdiction assumption. Most estate attorneys are deeply familiar with the laws of the state in which they practice and, at a high level, federal tax law. Bitcoin creates planning opportunities that require familiarity with favorable jurisdictions far from where the client lives — South Dakota and Nevada dynasty trust law, Wyoming LLC and trust statute innovations, Delaware trust flexibility. An attorney who does not know why a Wyoming LLC might hold a client's Bitcoin even if the client lives in California is operating with a significant knowledge gap.

"A standard estate plan for a Bitcoin holder is not a standard estate plan with 'Bitcoin' added at the end. The custody architecture, succession mechanics, and legal structure must be designed around how Bitcoin actually works — not how attorneys assume it works."

These are not minor technical footnotes. They are foundational issues that determine whether an estate plan actually works when it needs to. And most attorneys — even competent, expensive ones — will not know they are missing these elements.

Where to Find Bitcoin-Competent Attorneys

The candid answer is that there is no authoritative, continuously maintained registry of Bitcoin-competent estate attorneys in the United States. The field is too new and the competency bar is self-assessed. What exists instead is a set of channels that surface the right practitioners with higher frequency than cold searching.

Bitcoin-Focused Legal Communities and Conferences

The strongest signal that an attorney has done the work is where they spend their professional time. Attorneys who attend Bitcoin-specific events — Bitcoin conferences, digital asset law forums, events organized around the Bitcoin Legal Network or similar practitioner groups — have demonstrated a genuine investment in the space that goes beyond taking a call from a Bitcoin-holding client.

The Bitcoin Legal Network, Proof of Keys legal community discussions, and the Digital Assets working groups within state bar associations (particularly Wyoming and South Dakota, which have been most active in passing favorable Bitcoin legislation) have produced practitioners who are known and vetted within tight professional circles. Asking for introductions through these channels is more reliable than search engine queries.

CPA Referrals

A CPA who specializes in Bitcoin taxation — not just "cryptocurrency" generally, but specifically Bitcoin — has almost certainly worked with estate planning attorneys on client matters. Their referral list is invaluable because it comes with direct experience: they know which attorneys understand the interaction between income tax, gift tax, and estate tax for Bitcoin holders, who can be trusted not to draft documents that create accidental taxable events, and who will actually return calls from the CPA's office when coordination is required.

If you do not already have a CPA who specializes in Bitcoin, finding one first and asking for attorney referrals is often the most efficient path to a qualified legal team. The inverse is also true — an attorney who can refer you to a qualified Bitcoin CPA is demonstrating that they have worked in this space long enough to have built those relationships.

State Bar Association Referral Services

Most state bar associations maintain referral services with specialty designations. Attorneys who have pursued advanced certification in estate planning — LL.M. degrees in taxation or trust and estate law, board certification from the American College of Trust and Estate Counsel (ACTEC) — are demonstrating a depth of legal competence that is the necessary foundation for any Bitcoin-competent practitioner. ACTEC fellows in particular represent the top tier of estate planning legal practice and are the most likely subset of the bar to have current knowledge of digital asset issues.

Filtering for ACTEC fellows with demonstrated digital asset or Bitcoin experience narrows the field to a manageable set of candidates in most metropolitan areas.

Boutique Family Office and Wealth Management Firms

Multi-family offices that serve HNWI clients with Bitcoin holdings have legal relationships that most individual holders do not. If you work with a family office, wealth manager, or Bitcoin-focused RIA, their legal referral network is worth asking about explicitly. They will have worked through these issues with attorneys already and can shortcut your search substantially.

Work with The Bitcoin Family Office

We specialize exclusively in Bitcoin estate planning for serious holders. Whether you need help finding the right attorney, coordinating your professional team, or designing the foundational strategy before legal documents are drafted — we have done this before, and we know who does it well.

Explore Services Read the Planning Guide

The 10 Questions to Ask Any Attorney Before Hiring Them

These questions are designed to probe both dimensions of competence that a Bitcoin estate planning attorney must have: technical Bitcoin knowledge and legal depth. A passing answer on one axis and a failing answer on the other is not acceptable — both are essential.

Do not frame these as a test. Frame them as an effort to understand whether this is the right engagement for both parties. A genuinely competent attorney will welcome them. An attorney who becomes defensive or vague under questioning is showing you something important.

Question 1
How do you handle the seed phrase succession for a self-custody Bitcoin position in an estate plan?
This is the most important technical question on the list. A qualified answer describes a mechanism for ensuring the executor or trustee can access the seed phrase after death without that phrase being exposed during the holder's lifetime — options include sealed letter of instruction with a named custodian, a professional custodian (Unchained, Casa, etc.), a multisig arrangement in which a trusted attorney or family member holds one key, or a vault service. Red flag: any answer that conflates seed phrases with passwords, exchange login credentials, or that defers the question entirely.
Question 2
What is your preferred approach for Bitcoin held in a trust — exchange custody, third-party qualified custodian, or self-custody multisig? What are the tradeoffs?
An attorney advising on a trust that will hold Bitcoin must understand the custody options and their legal implications. Exchange accounts do not transfer easily to trustees. Self-custody in a trust requires a mechanism for the trustee to access keys. Qualified custodians (Unchained, Anchorage, BitGo, Coinbase Prime) have institutional-grade custody agreements that interface predictably with trust structures. A qualified answer engages with the tradeoffs. An unqualified answer treats custody as someone else's problem.
Question 3
What provisions do you use in trust documents to accommodate a beneficiary receiving Bitcoin instead of cash — including how you handle valuation disputes and forced liquidation scenarios?
Standard trust documents contemplate distributing cash or traditional securities. Bitcoin introduces complications: what price do you use for distribution valuation? What happens if the trustee must liquidate Bitcoin to make a cash distribution and the timing is unfavorable? Sophisticated attorneys draft specific provisions addressing Bitcoin's unique distribution mechanics, including the beneficiary's right to receive Bitcoin in-kind rather than forced liquidation. Red flag: "we use standard asset distribution language and that covers everything."
Question 4
Have you structured a dynasty trust or irrevocable trust that holds Bitcoin? What situs jurisdiction did you use and why?
This question distinguishes attorneys who have actually done this work from those who understand it theoretically. The jurisdiction question matters because South Dakota, Nevada, Wyoming, and Delaware offer materially different advantages for long-duration Bitcoin-holding trusts — including perpetual duration, favorable creditor protection, no state income tax on trust earnings, and directed trust statutes that allow the investment function (holding Bitcoin) to be separated from the distribution function. An attorney who can speak to situs selection from first-hand experience has done the work.
Question 5
How do you document the stepped-up cost basis for Bitcoin in an estate you have administered, and what records do you require the executor to maintain?
The step-up in basis at death eliminates a lifetime of capital gains for heirs — but only if it is properly documented. The attorney should know that date-of-death Bitcoin prices must be pulled from recognized exchanges, averaged, and preserved; that this documentation establishes the heirs' basis for all future capital gains calculations; and that different lots of Bitcoin acquired at different times on different exchanges may require individual basis tracking. An attorney who says "the estate just uses fair market value" without discussing documentation protocols is leaving the heirs exposed.
Question 6
What is your experience with IRS Form 706 (estate tax return) for estates with significant digital assets, and how do you value illiquid or hard-to-price positions?
This is a legal competence question. Form 706 is the federal estate tax return and it must be filed for estates exceeding the exemption — but it is also used for making portability elections even when no tax is owed. Bitcoin on major exchanges has a readily determinable market value. Bitcoin held in obscure wallets, staked positions, or locked in time-based multisig arrangements requires more nuanced valuation. The attorney's comfort with Form 706 and digital asset valuation tells you whether they have done this at the execution level, not just the planning level.
Question 7
What is the interaction between a GRAT or Charitable Remainder Trust and a Bitcoin position — and under what circumstances would you recommend each?
This question tests legal planning depth, not just Bitcoin knowledge. GRATs work best when funded with assets with high expected appreciation and low current value — which can describe Bitcoin during cyclical drawdowns. CRTs allow the conversion of a large, low-basis Bitcoin position into an income stream without capital gains tax. An attorney who can articulate when to use each structure, what the risks are (GRAT mortality risk, CRT income stream mechanics), and how to fund them efficiently with Bitcoin is operating at the level of sophistication your estate requires. See our guide on dynasty trusts for Bitcoin for more on related structures.
Question 8
If I hold Bitcoin in an LLC, how does that change the estate planning analysis — and what are the advantages and risks of that structure?
Wyoming LLCs and similar entities are sometimes used to hold Bitcoin because they create an additional layer of asset protection, can simplify the transfer of beneficial interest without triggering direct Bitcoin transactions, and in some structures allow for valuation discounts at the time of transfer for estate planning purposes. An attorney who understands the use of holding entities for Bitcoin — and their limitations — is operating with full situational awareness of the planning toolkit.
Question 9
What state-specific tax issues should I be aware of given where I live — and would it make sense to consider domicile planning?
State estate taxes and inheritance taxes vary dramatically. Oregon taxes estates above $1,000,000. Pennsylvania charges inheritance tax from dollar one, even on transfers to children. Nevada and Wyoming have no state estate tax and no income tax on trust earnings. A competent attorney should be able to quickly map your state-level exposure and flag whether domicile planning — establishing legal residence in a more favorable state — is worth analyzing. An attorney who says "that's a tax question, ask your CPA" is abdicating half the analysis.
Question 10
How do you stay current on Bitcoin-specific legal developments — IRS guidance, state legislation, court decisions involving digital assets?
This is a proxy for ongoing investment in the space. IRS guidance on digital assets continues to evolve. States like Wyoming, South Dakota, and Nevada are actively passing legislation that creates new planning opportunities. Court decisions in estate and trust disputes involving Bitcoin are beginning to emerge. An attorney who attends relevant conferences, monitors IRS notices, and maintains relationships with practitioners in specialized jurisdictions is one who will keep your plan current as the landscape shifts. An attorney who has not updated their digital asset knowledge since 2022 is almost certainly behind in material ways.

Five Red Flags That Should End the Conversation

The questions above reveal depth. These red flags reveal disqualifying incompetence or misalignment that no amount of willingness to learn can fix in time for your estate plan.

Red Flag 1
"We treat Bitcoin just like any other investment account."
This is the most common and most dangerous misunderstanding. Bitcoin in self-custody is not "an investment account." It cannot be transferred via custodian notification. It has no SIPC protection. It has no password reset. It has no institution that will respond to a probate court order by initiating a transfer. An attorney who cannot articulate the difference between exchange-held Bitcoin and self-custodied Bitcoin has not done the most basic first-principles thinking about what they are advising on.
Red Flag 2
They have never drafted a plan for a client with Bitcoin before — and they are not upfront about it.
There is no shame in being new to a field. There is a problem with not knowing what you do not know. An attorney who has never handled a Bitcoin estate matter can still be a good choice if they are transparent about their knowledge gaps, have a clear plan to fill them (collaborating with a specialist, reviewing relevant resources), and price accordingly. The dangerous attorney is the one who does not know what questions to ask — and does not know that they do not know.
Red Flag 3
Their engagement letter does not specifically address digital assets.
Engagement letters define the scope of the attorney's representation. An engagement letter that describes "estate planning services" without specifically referencing digital asset planning means the attorney has no specific obligations regarding your Bitcoin holdings. If the resulting plan fails to address custody succession or uses inadequate language for self-custodied assets, the attorney's liability exposure is limited — because they never contracted to address those issues. Ask to see a sample or outline before signing anything.
Red Flag 4
They cannot explain the difference between a seed phrase and a private key — or they conflate "Bitcoin" with "crypto."
A seed phrase generates a master private key from which all child keys (and all addresses) are derived. A private key controls a specific address. Understanding this hierarchy matters for how you document access instructions, how you structure multisig custody, and how you advise heirs on recovering a wallet. An attorney who cannot explain this — even at a high level — has not done the technical groundwork. Separately, consistently saying "crypto" when you are discussing a Bitcoin-only portfolio is a signal that the attorney is pattern-matching to generic digital asset knowledge rather than thinking specifically about Bitcoin's unique properties.
Red Flag 5
They push you toward liquidating Bitcoin to simplify the estate plan.
Some attorneys, facing unfamiliar asset classes, will default to recommending simplification — "just sell the Bitcoin and put it in an index fund, then this is all straightforward." That may or may not be the right call depending on your specific situation and risk tolerance, but it is not the attorney's call to make. The role of an estate planning attorney is to plan around the assets a client wants to hold, not to recommend asset decisions outside their competence. An attorney who defaults to "sell it" when facing complexity around Bitcoin custody is telling you they are not equipped for the engagement.

Fee Structures for Bitcoin Estate Planning Attorneys

Estate planning engagements are priced in three primary structures. Understanding the tradeoffs helps you evaluate whether you are getting appropriate value — and whether the fee structure incentivizes thoroughness or speed.

Structure Typical Range Best For Watch Out For
Hourly Billing $400–$900/hour for specialized digital asset estate attorneys; $250–$500/hour for generalists Complex, evolving engagements; ongoing counsel as your situation changes; estates requiring substantial legal research on novel issues Bills that escalate unexpectedly; attorneys who are learning on your dime without disclosing it; lack of cost predictability for a defined set of documents
Flat Fee $5,000–$15,000 for a comprehensive Bitcoin estate plan (will, revocable trust, powers of attorney, pour-over will, digital asset addendum); $15,000–$50,000+ for dynasty trusts, GRATs, or complex multi-entity structures Defined scope engagements where the deliverables are clear; clients who want cost predictability; first-time plan creation Flat fees that cover only basic documents without Bitcoin-specific provisions; scope creep that triggers hourly billing after a low flat fee lands the client
Ongoing Retainer $2,000–$8,000/month for access to ongoing counsel; annual review engagements at $3,000–$10,000 per year HNWI clients with complex, evolving estates; situations where legislative changes (TCJA provisions, new IRS guidance) require regular plan updates; coordinated team relationships Recommended for holders above $5M. Retainer relationships mean your attorney is thinking about your estate continuously, not only when you initiate contact.

For a first engagement creating a comprehensive Bitcoin estate plan — including a revocable trust, will, durable power of attorney, healthcare directive, digital asset addendum, and a custody succession protocol — expect to pay $8,000–$20,000 with a specialist. Anything substantially below that range from an attorney claiming Bitcoin competence should be treated with skepticism: either the scope is narrower than you need, or the attorney has not invested what it takes to actually do this work well.

For more complex structures — irrevocable trust, dynasty trust, GRAT — plan for $25,000–$75,000 or more depending on the complexity of the structure and the situs jurisdiction. These engagements involve legal research in multiple jurisdictions, coordination with trust companies, and documentation that must be bulletproof. The cost is real. So is the cost of getting it wrong.

What Documents to Have Ready Before Your First Meeting

The more organized you are entering an attorney engagement, the more efficiently — and cheaply — the process runs. The following documents give the attorney everything they need to map your situation and recommend the appropriate structure without a series of information-gathering calls that bill at your expense.

⚠ Do Not Bring Your Seed Phrase to a Meeting

Your seed phrase should never be presented to, photographed by, emailed to, or seen by an attorney or any professional advisor. The succession mechanism for a seed phrase — sealed letter of instruction, multisig architecture, professional custodian — is something you structure in advance, not something you hand over in a law office. An attorney who asks to see or hold your seed phrase does not understand what they are doing. This alone is a terminal disqualifying event.

Coordinating Your Bitcoin Estate Planning Team

Bitcoin estate planning is inherently multi-disciplinary. No single professional can cover all the ground your estate requires. The effective structure is a coordinated team of three: an estate planning attorney, a Bitcoin-competent CPA, and (for serious positions) a qualified custodian with institutional-grade succession infrastructure.

This team is not just a list of advisors you call separately. It is a functional unit that needs to communicate with each other, coordinate documentation, and catch the gaps that exist at each professional's edge. The most expensive mistakes in Bitcoin estate planning happen at handoff points — when the attorney drafts trust documents without knowing what the custodian can actually execute, or when the CPA calculates charitable deductions without knowing what basis documentation the attorney is using, or when the custodian structures a multisig arrangement that the attorney's trust documents cannot accommodate.

Estate Planning Attorney

  • Trust and will drafting with Bitcoin-specific provisions
  • Situs jurisdiction selection for long-duration trusts
  • Gift tax return preparation and lifetime exemption tracking
  • Powers of attorney with digital asset language
  • Custody succession documentation and Letter of Instruction framework
  • Coordination with trust company if professional trustee is used

Bitcoin CPA / Tax Advisor

  • Cost basis tracking across all positions and acquisition events
  • Annual gift tax return preparation (Form 709)
  • Estate tax return preparation (Form 706) and portability elections
  • Income tax planning around GRAT, CRT, and charitable structures
  • Mining income tax strategy if applicable
  • State tax exposure analysis and domicile planning input

Qualified Custodian

  • Institutional-grade key management with documented succession procedures
  • Trust-compatible custody agreements that interface with attorney documents
  • Multi-institution multisig for large positions
  • Executor support at time of death for accessing estate assets
  • Inheritance services that allow keys to be transferred to named successors

The coordination protocol between these three is straightforward: your attorney and CPA should speak directly before documents are finalized (not through you as an intermediary), your custodian should review the trust documents to confirm that the custody architecture you have built is compatible with the trustee succession mechanisms the attorney has drafted, and all three should participate in an annual review to keep the plan current as your holdings, your family situation, and the regulatory environment evolve.

Annual reviews are not optional. Bitcoin's value trajectory means that an estate plan calibrated for your current position may be materially inadequate two or three years from now. The gifting program that was moving assets efficiently last year may need to be recalibrated. The exemption thresholds that felt comfortable at your position when the plan was drafted may look very different today. The structures your attorney built around then-current IRS guidance may require amendment to reflect new notices or court decisions.

Budget for an annual team meeting — ideally with all three professionals on a single call — as a line item in your professional services budget. It is the cheapest insurance you will buy for your generational wealth.

Bitcoin miners face a distinct estate planning challenge. Mining income is taxed as ordinary income at receipt, but once mined and held, the Bitcoin benefits from all the same estate planning strategies described here — step-up in basis, dynasty trust structures, charitable giving vehicles. The difference is in the income tax treatment on the front end: bonus depreciation, equipment deductions, and operational expense strategies can dramatically reduce the effective tax burden on newly mined Bitcoin before it enters the estate planning system. A Bitcoin-competent CPA who understands both mining tax strategy and estate planning integration is essential for any miner with significant holdings.

Explore Bitcoin Mining Tax Strategy at Abundant Mines →

What a Good Bitcoin Estate Plan Actually Contains

Once you have found your attorney and engaged the team, understanding what you are paying for helps you evaluate the output. A complete Bitcoin estate plan for a serious holder is not a single document. It is a coordinated set of documents and mechanisms that work together.

At minimum, a comprehensive plan includes:

For holders above the estate tax threshold or those who want to begin transferring Bitcoin to the next generation efficiently, the plan should also include:

For the basics of how Bitcoin should be addressed within a will specifically, see our guide on how to include Bitcoin in your will.

The Standard of Care You Should Expect

Beyond the documents themselves, you should expect an attorney who communicates proactively when something changes that affects your plan — a new IRS notice on digital asset reporting, a state law change that affects your trust situs, a shift in gift tax exclusion amounts. You should expect coordination with your other advisors without being the relay point yourself. You should expect annual outreach for a plan review, not silence until you call.

These are not extraordinary expectations. They are what any thoughtful client relationship looks like. The difference is that in the Bitcoin estate planning context, the attorney you choose is almost certainly one of a small number in the country who can actually deliver on them. That rarity commands a premium — but it also means the competition among qualified practitioners is less acute, and the ones who are genuinely excellent can afford to be selective about clients.

Present yourself as the kind of client a serious attorney wants to work with: organized, informed, prepared to engage substantively, and committed to maintaining the plan over time. The attorneys worth having are not chasing every engagement that comes in the door. They are building long-term relationships with clients whose estates they can actually protect.

The Bottom Line

The right bitcoin estate planning attorney is not the most expensive one, the most credentialed one, or the most famous one. It is the one who understands that Bitcoin is not a brokerage account — that its custody architecture determines whether your heirs ever access what you built, and that the legal structures around it must be designed around how Bitcoin actually works, not how attorneys assume it does.

That attorney exists. They are practicing in major cities and, increasingly, serving clients remotely because the market for their expertise is thin and geographically distributed. Finding them requires effort. The ten questions above will surface them quickly. The five red flags will eliminate the pretenders just as fast.

The stakes are straightforward: your heirs will either inherit your Bitcoin intact, with legal structures that protect it across generations and a step-up in basis that eliminates a lifetime of capital gains — or they will inherit legal documents that do not work, custody situations they cannot access, and an estate tax bill they cannot pay without liquidating what you spent years accumulating.

The advisor selection is the first decision. It is also one of the most consequential ones.

Ready to Build the Right Team?

The Bitcoin Family Office works with serious Bitcoin holders to design estate plans that actually work — coordinating attorneys, CPAs, and custodians into a functioning team built around your specific holdings and goals. We have done this before, and we know who in the legal community does it well.

Work with The Bitcoin Family Office Read the Planning Guide
HF

Hal Franklin

The Bitcoin Family Office

Hal Franklin writes on Bitcoin estate planning, tax strategy, and wealth preservation for long-term holders. The Bitcoin Family Office helps Bitcoin-wealthy families structure assets for multigenerational transfer — from dynasty trusts and GRATs to professional custodian coordination and attorney vetting for serious Bitcoin positions.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. The selection of an estate planning attorney and the design of an estate plan involves complex, individualized legal analysis that no general guide can replace. Attorney competence, fee structures, and professional standards described in this article reflect general patterns in the field as of early 2026 and may vary by jurisdiction and individual practice. Always conduct your own due diligence when engaging legal counsel. Consult a qualified estate attorney, CPA, and financial advisor before implementing any estate planning strategy.